Tuesday, March 12, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, March 12, 1 9 6 8 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five CLASH WITH POLICE: Students Storm Warsaw Communist Party Office ROTC Classes Stress Necessity of Leadership Conscientious Objector Earns Admiration as Marine Medic WARSAW, Poland (M. tudents * I- ~ LU~ia marched on Communist party headquarters in Warsaw yesterday shouting "Freedom!" and "Demo- cracy!" They clashed anew with police crying again and again "Gestapo, Gestapo." Party members and workers watched from the windows of the gray, forbidding building as hel- meted riot police used tear gas and rubber truncheons In an effort to disperse the demonstrators, numbering several thousand. Tear gas cylinders soard through the air and were often tossed back at the police. Rocks, sticks, bottles and bricks were sent flying toward the police ring around the build- ing. Packed streetcars and buses were brought to a halt by the action. The acrid tear gas filled the jam- med intersection where the build- ing is located. The scene resembled a battlefield. Women screamed insults at po- lice clubbing youths with trunch- eons. Other passers by rubbed eyes made red by the tear gas. Police finally managed to dis- perse the shouting crowd. It was the third outbreak of violence in Warsaw since student demonstrations began last Friday at the downtown campus of War- saw University. On Saturday, po- lice and youths clashed again near the Polytechnic University. As on Saturday, the harsh police measures appeared to have been set off by rock throwing youths. Friday's violence began after a protest against expulsion of two Warsaw University students on the grounds they took part in a dem- onstration Jan. 1 protesting forced closure of a popular play which had some lines construed as anti- Soviet by the censors. Saturday's demonstrations protested police measures used the day before. Informed sources said that at a noon meeting yesterday at War- saw University, about 3,000 stu- "dents and a number of professors ~passed a resolution demanding Ifreedom for students arrested after Friday's demonstration. The reso- fution, informants said, also car- ried an appeal to other Polish universities to support the War- saw cause. The resolution was said to de- mand in addition thatthe state controlled press publish the stu- dents' accounts and explanation for their protest actions Outside the university gates a large crowd taunted police and .plain clothes auxiliaries. They burned newspapers with accom- panying cries of "the press is ly- ing." A number of youths armed themselves with rocks and bricks and positioned themselves on the steps of the Holy Cross Catholic church across the street from the university gates. They hurled them at passing policemen and vehicles. A convoy of police vehicles moved and stopped in front of the church. Dozens of helmeted riot police jumped out and charged the youths, who ducked into the 4. church. Police did not follow but carried their attack to a crowd in a next door courtyard. (Continued from Page 1) The office that runs the Navy ROTC, the office of the assistant chief of naval personnel for ed- ucation and training, structures programs which rely heavily on cadet involvement and responsi- bility. The results at the University are academic credit courses in which students have major responsibility for content and cadet-run "drill staff" and "group staff" activ- ities. Air Science 401 and 402, for example, depend on a large amount of independent work by students. The topics covered include mili- tary justice, protocol, manage- ment, staffing and the use of com- puters. Hesselgrave presents an ROTC- supplied filmstrip on one of the topics and for two weeks students present reports on specific aspects of the topic. "Three-quarters of the class is cadet presentation," says Hessel- grave. "Most of the other material is produced and printed by ROTC headquarters. Their sources are psychological and sociological text- books like many used on campus." Practice in leadership is most pronounced in "drill staff" and "group staff" duties. Drill staff, patterned after the staff organ- ization of the armed forces, boils down to what one commandant terms "a nebulous end result"- mandatory weekly drill periods. ,"Drill staff is a training ve- hicle making the cadets put into practice the principles of leader- ship," explains Air Force Capt. Dwight Hageman. "The cadet com- mander of the drill staff doesn't have a completely free hand in running the drill session. He has to fulfill certain requirements." These include "responsibility for appearance of the cadets, military courtesy and conduct," which are necessary functions. "I could do the job myself, but the cadets would not benefit as much them- selves," adds Hageman. Leadership training is the cen- tral interest of ROTC staff. "Lead- ership is a thin thread that inter- twines through the entire pro- gram," Army Capt. Richard Cope- land explains. One student con- tinues, "The program brings out your leadership potential, it forces you to lead." Another aspect of leadership de- velopment is the ROTC "group staff" in which cadets learn most- ly military paperwork procedures. They perform business functions like arranging special weekend operations, classifying and rating cadets, appointing new staffs, pub- ishing the units' newspapers and preparing for summer camp. The stress on leadership even goes so far as to justify cadets standing up in class when they speak. "Getting them standing up, speaking on their feet, is similar to the situation on a ship," ex- plains Lt. Obenshain. "It adds confidence. "In any event," he concludes, "it doesn't hurt." TOMORROW: Classes and Credit KHE SANH, Vietnam (iP)--The Methodist minister's son was a conscientious objector and a Ma- rine outcast. He hated war and refused to be a rifleman. His strongest swear word was "Golly." He could not develop a tough exterior. Until he went to work aiding the wounded at Khe Sanh, Pvt. Jonathan M. Spicer of Miami, Fla., was despised by some of' the other Leathernecks around him and only tolerated by others. Now he is a hero, a growing legend and badly wounded. Friends said that Spicer joined the Marines almost on a whim when he went to a recruiting sta- tion with a friend. Somewhere in basic training, when the instruc- tors were attempting ,to turn him into a professional killer, he re- belled. "He just sort of suddenly real- ized combat wasn't really for him," recalled Cpl. Daniel Sulli- van of Boston, Mass. "He wasn't afraid of dying. He said it just before the day he was hit. But he said he could not put himself up to killing a man." Tried for CO Friends said Spicer, who stands 5 feet 9, tried to declare himself a, conscientious objector in boot camp and at various other points on his route to Vietnam. He was always told: "Wait until your next assignment." Finally he was assigned to an infantry battalion at Khe Sanh, the besieged Marine base 15 miles south of the demilitarized zone, "He was treated with contempt by his fellow infantrymen," said an officer who was instrumental in getting Spicer transferred to one of Khe Sanh's many medical units. "He was naive, and the toughness Marines show outward- ly was foreign to him." Unselfish, Brave "What no one realized" said Lt. Edward Feldman, a medical offi- cer from Forest Hills, N.Y., "was that he was thoroughly unselfish and wouldn't hesitate to put him- self in danger." Spicer "was a tiger' when it came to the welfare of the wound- ed. He grabbed an unwounded man who attempted to get aboard a medical evacuation helicopter ahead of the wounded and rough- ly pulled him back. Doctors said that when shell fire pinned down the stretcher bearers rushing the wounded men to the helicopters, Spicer repeat- edly covered his man with his own body. A month ago the round faced Marine ran out of luck. "He helped get one litter on a chopper and started brick to the sandbagged area," said Lt. James 0. Finnegan of Philadelphia, Pa. Ignores Danger Other stretcher bearers were having trouble loading their lit- ters and Spicer, despite a call from one doctor to "get the hell in here," turned back to the chop- per to help. He arrived about the same time a North Vietnamese mortar shell burst among the wounded men and litter carriers, wounding about 30 men. Spicer was hit in the heart, face and legs. He was saved only by a delicate heart operation by Dr. Finnegan and Lt. John Mad- dilligan of Brooklyn, N.Y. Earns Award Finnegan recommended Spicer for the Silver Star for bravery and gallantry. The Khe Sanh base's commander, Col. David E. Lownds, mentioned the Navy Cross. Men who spent fruitless hours trying to teach Spicer to swear and be tough like a Marine said they felt a little guilty. Teachers To Return To Posts in Florida -Associated Press AN IRATE CHICAGO RESIDENT clashed yesterday with police- men over the busing of Negro pupils from an inner-city school ,district to an all white school on the city's northwest side. The argument occurred after police asked the man to move away from the school. Negroes Inorate Chicago Schools TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (/) - The statewide Florida teachers strikeI ended yesterday but in many counties local teacher groups re- fused to, return to class unless school boards rehired all of those who walked out. The Florida Education Associa- tion, the teachers spokesman, said about 9,000 teachers still were out of school. There are 60,000 teach- ers in ithe state's public schools and, at the height of the strike, more than 26,000 stayed away' from classes. In the state's largest school system, Dade County, Miami, all of the teachers were back to work. Pupils in Miami were delighted when Dr. Edward Whigham, the county school superintendent there, said the official position was that pupils would only have to make up one day for the three weeks missed. The president of the Florida Education Association, Dexter Hagman, said striking teachers were holding out in about 40 counties. In almost all, Hagman said, the trouble was refusal of school boards to rehire principals and administrators who joined the teachers in their walkout. I' CHICAGO (P) - Negro children integrated eight grade schools on the Northwest Side peacefully yes- terday at the start of a bitterly debated program to bus them from overcrowded schools. A fire bomb hurled through the window of one school hours before classes began caused only slight damage and no one was in- jured. A second fire bomb did not explode. Crowds of white adults gathered at three of the eight schools and there was some derisive shouting and jeering as the 249 scrubbed, neatly dressed children filed from buses and carried their books through a cordon of white on- lookers. A police cruiser was deployed to escort each of the eight buses which picked up the children in their predominantly Negro neigh- borhoods of the Austin district. A handful of police were sta- tioned at the eight receiving schools. Telephoned bomb threats prompted them to search the Smyser and Sayre schools. They found nothing.. Crowds assembled at the Dever school, where the firebombs were tossed, made the most noise and there were dissident murmurs when police ordered the adults to leave the school grounds after the bused pupils were safely inside the school. Another told a newsman, "We paid $27,500 (the cost of a home) to get away from the May school and they followed me over here." The May and Spencer schools were the two overcrowded schools in'the Austin area relieved by the busing plan which stirred protest demonstrations and angry com- munity meetings. James Redmons, superintendent of schools, proposed busing Negro pupils to schools in all white neighborhoods in an attempt to halt the slide in numbers of inte- grated schools in Chicago. In 1963, there were 57 inte- grated schools in the city. The number dropped to 45 until Mon- day when the eight Northwest Side schools were integrated. Redmon's plan conceived last year and supported in principle by the Board of Education, was stale- mated in February by a 5-5 board vote. The plan was amended to include a parental option and the board approved busing March 4 by an 8-1 vote. 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